Emotional objectivity: Neural representations of emotions and their interaction with cognition

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Abstract

Recent advances in our understanding of information states in the human brain have opened a new window into the brain's representation of emotion. While emotion was once thought to constitute a separate domain from cognition, current evidence suggests that all events are filtered through the lens of whether they are good or bad for us. Focusing on new methods of decoding information states from brain activation, we review growing evidence that emotion is represented at multiple levels of our sensory systems and infuses perception, attention, learning, and memory. We provide evidence that the primary function of emotional representations is to produce unified emotion, perception, and thought (e.g., "That is a good thing") rather than discrete and isolated psychological events (e.g., "That is a thing. I feel good"). The emergent view suggests ways in which emotion operates as a fundamental feature of cognition, by design ensuring that emotional outcomes are the central object of perception, thought, and action.

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Todd, R. M., Miskovic, V., Chikazoe, J., & Anderson, A. K. (2020, January 4). Emotional objectivity: Neural representations of emotions and their interaction with cognition. Annual Review of Psychology. Annual Reviews Inc. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-psych-010419-051044

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